Anyone know anything about Alborellos/albarellos - antique apothecary jars/ catholic heraldry?
Last edited Tue Jan 30, 2018, 01:00 PM - Edit history (4)
Found this at a thrift store.
Cremor indicates that it held cream of tartar.
I learned that it's an alborella/albarello, and the design on it is ecclesiastical heraldry.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecclesiastical_heraldry
I can't find any information on who the heraldry belongs to - and can't locate any yellow galero heraldry at all.
I have only found one other example online of an albarello with such heraldry, and it's a different type of clay.
https://www.rubylane.com/item/61838-1078532x20TR-00229/An-18th-century-Mex78ican-Colonial-Talavera
Anyone here familiar with this type of pottery?
ehrnst
(32,640 posts)Vinca
(51,054 posts)you need an expert in Talavera pottery. There's a somewhat similar one for sale on ebay for $900. Great find!
ehrnst
(32,640 posts)Often the families donate items that were the hospice patients' to the store.
Found a piece of Sasha Brastoff pottery there for a couple bucks that I sold for $300 on Ebay.
Found a mid-century "mushroom" lamp for $10 and sold it on Craigslist for $250.
This is unlike anything I've seen, tho.
Vinca
(51,054 posts)guarding the hen house (antique dealers "volunteering" and getting first dibs). Every so often I find something, but you have to know about the most obscure potters, painters, etc. Every so often they mistake a watercolor for a print and that's how I made my best find there - a lovely watercolor by a Scottish artist that I liked so much I had some minor restoration work done and had it put in a period frame. It's hanging in my living room. Although I'm a dealer, I always consider my best finds the ones I want to keep. Let me know what you find out on your pottery.